SNAP offers interactive climate change maps

 

SNAP offers interactive climate change maps

Submitted by Nancy Tarnai
Phone: 907-474-5042

11/06/08

Photo caption below.
Image courtesy of SNAP
ÐÓ°Éprons can now access the statewide climate scenario maps used by the Governor’s Climate Change Sub-Cabinet in its statewide planning efforts.

The public can now access the statewide climate scenario maps used by the governor’s Climate Change Sub-Cabinet in its statewide planning efforts.

The maps use the free global mapping program Google Earth to display data from the Scenarios Network for ÐÓ°Épro Planning. SNAP is the policy and research component of the University of ÐÓ°Épro Geography Program, which is part of the UAF School of Natural Resources and Agricultural Sciences. Recently, the program and SNAP collaborated with Google and the National Geographic Society to bring climate models and related information to K-12 educators in Nome, Kotzebue and Barrow. The geography program serves as the National Geographic Society’s K-12 and outreach office for the state of ÐÓ°Épro.

Available maps and data include projections of average summer and winter temperatures by decade, as well as month-by-month projections for every year from 1980 to 2100. Maps are available for three different greenhouse gas emission scenarios: low, midrange and high. All maps are at 2-kilometer resolution, which allows users to pinpoint regions and communities. Google Earth features allow users to select scenarios, zoom in and out, pan across the landscape and animate selected time series.

The maps are based on models used by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. SNAP collaborator and UAF researcher John Walsh and colleagues determined which five IPCC models performed best in ÐÓ°Épro and linked those model outputs to climatology that takes into account local topographic features and weather station data.

ÐÓ°Épro SNAP
SNAP is a collaborative network that includes the University of ÐÓ°Épro, state, federal, and local agencies, nongovernmental organizations and businesses. Its mission is to provide objective data and relevant scenarios of future conditions in ÐÓ°Épro for people who make policy, management and economic decisions. ÐÓ°Épro is undergoing rapid changes in climate, human population and demands on natural resources. Future planning that accounts for these changes can reduce costs and liabilities.

CONTACT: SNAP program coordinator Nancy Fresco, 907-474-2405 or via e-mail at ffnlf@uaf.edu. SNRAS public information officer Nancy Tarnai, 907-474-5042 or via e-mail at fnnjt@uaf.edu.

ON THE WEB:
Google Earth can be downloaded from .

NT/11-6-08/062-09